ATTORNEY PAUL A. KSICINSKI 414-530-5214
ATTORNEY PAUL A. KSICINSKI
TOP 100 WISCONSIN CRIMINAL DEFENSE LAWYER
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Henry Nellum case selected by USA Network as a compelling homicide trial to keep an eye on in 2018

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ESTATE PLANNING FOR THE SINGLE PARENT

3/28/2015

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First: Don't delay the need for estate planning for your peace of mind and your children's sakes.

The single-parent family is a fact of life today. The U.S. Census Bureau released a report in November, 2009 called "Custodial Mothers and Fathers and Their Child Support: 2007", there are about 80 million children under 21 in the United States, and about 22 million of these children are being raised in a single parent household. http://www.census.gov/prod/2009pubs/p60-237.pdf

These single-parent households are economically unique, especially when it comes to protecting dependents from financial uncertainties. That is because, unless there is an absent parent providing support, economic security hinges on the custodial parent's income. This creates an at-risk situation. The reason: the death of the custodial parent will almost certainly lead to the end of the existing family unit.

If you are a single parent, your premature death could have consequences for your children in several ways beyond the emotional loss of a parent. To help protect your children, you should consider the following:

  • Make sure your will is up to date. Otherwise, everything involving your estate and your children's financial future may be decided by a probate judge.
  • Select a guardian for minor children and do so with great care. Select someone who is capable and willing to take on the tremendous responsibility of raising your children if anything should happen to you. Make sure guardians understand that this is not a ceremonial honor (such as becoming a godparent), but the acceptance of a legal responsibility. Talk to your attorney about drafting a guardianship document and making it part of your will.
  • Leave written instructions regarding everything from how you want your children raised (religious preferences, college plans, etc.) to how you want assets managed and used to benefit and protect your children. These will serve as guidelines to help those who assume the responsibility of raising your children. Put these instructions in your will.
  • Make sure your children's future needs are funded. Life insurance can provide the funds to raise your children and help fund their education. (Note: Do not name minor children as beneficiaries. Instead, consider using a trust. See the following point.)
  • Make trust arrangements — and pick a trusted advisor as trustee — so your assets are managed according to your wishes for your children's benefits. Talk to your attorney about the
However, the most essential estate planning document that anyone can benefit from is a power of attorney and/or advance medical directive. Once you turn 18 years old, your parents may no longer make medical decisions on your behalf unless you consent to this arrangement. If you want to have control over who can make medical and financial decisions on your behalf in the event that you can no longer do so for yourself, it is important to draft a power of attorney.

The other critical document you will likely want to draft is a basic will. Even if you do not have many financial assets, chances are that you have some personal property of sentimental value. If you want to ensure that this property is distributed according to your wishes upon your death, you will need to draft a legally enforceable will.

Here are three estate planning documents that you'll probably want to consider:

  1. Power of attorney. Powers of attorney generally grant family members or loved ones the power to make certain decisions for you. There are three types of power of attorney, each of which can be an important tool in the estate planning toolkit. The general power of attorney grants its holder power over a broad range of legal, financial, and medical decisions. The durable power of attorney is used to give its holder the power over medical or financial decisions in the event the grantor is incapacitated. A special power of attorney is used to grant the power for a particular business transaction.
  2. Advance medical directive. Also known as a living will, an advanced medical directive dictates the type of life-prolonging treatment an individual wishes to receive in the event she's unable to communicate her desires. For example, an advanced medical directive could allow an individual who does not wish to be kept alive in a vegetative or irreversibly comatose state to ensure that those wishes are honored.
  3. Basic will or trust. A basic will is the most common way for people to direct the distribution of their estate -- real estate, money, possessions, etc. -- after they're deceased. Increasingly, however, wills are being augmented, or even replaced in some instances, by the use of trusts. Trusts are instruments created either during a person's lifetime, or in a person's will, that grant rights in that person's property to others known as beneficiaries. There are a wide variety of trusts, offering a wide range of potential benefits, from tax-savings to avoiding probate.
For help with these documents and to learn more about other tools that may help you accomplish your estate planning goals, contact Paul A. Ksicinski.

 

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TIME TO MAKE SENSE (AND RAISE REVENUE) FROM MARIJUANA

3/25/2015

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The time has come to remove marijuana from Wisconsin’s Schedule 1 of the Wisconsin Controlled Substances Act.  The Wisconsin Controlled Substances Act (Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 961, http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/961/I/01/4) is similar to the Federal Controlled Substances Act (21 United States Code Sections 801 et seq) in that it creates lists, or “schedules” of drugs, numbered one through five.

Drugs listed in Schedule 1 are supposed to be a drug or other substance that has a high potential for abuse, has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States, or lacks accepted safety for use of the drug or other substance under medical supervision.  Examples of Schedule 1 drugs include the opiates, such as heroin, morphine, etc.  A “Schedule 2” drug is meant to include drugs with a high potential for abuse, a currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States or a currently accepted medical use with severe restrictions, and, abuse of the drug or other substance may lead to severe psychological or physical dependence.  Examples of Schedule 2 drugs include cocaine, methamphetamine, and pentobarbital.

Where has the government seen fit to categorize marijuana within this scheme?  Currently, they still list marijuana as a “Schedule 1” category drug, right in there with heroin.  Apparently the government views marijuana as more dangerous than methamphetamine, which is only a Schedule 2 drug.

Wisconsin as of April 18, 2014 has a very limited medical cannabis bill was passed and signed by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. The new law exempts a very limited class of individuals from criminal penalties for the use and possession of cannabidiol “in a form without a psychoactive effect.”  The law allows individuals with seizure disorders to possess non-psychoactive cannabidiol if they have their physician’s written approval. However, it doesn’t give patients a realistic way to obtain their medicine in Wisconsin. With all these limitations, this law may be unworkable even for the limited population it’s meant to help.  While this is an improvement to current law, it leaves the vast majority of medical marijuana patients without legal protections for using and possessing the medicine their doctor thinks is best for them.

Federally, new bipartisan legislation, S.683 - Compassionate Access, Research Expansion, and Respect States Act of 2015, https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/senate-bill/683/text, has been proposed to move marijuana from Schedule 1 to Schedule 2.  Wisconsin should do the same.  Find out who your Wisconsin legislator is here, http://maps.legis.wisconsin.gov/, and contact them AND TELL THEM TO MAKE THE CHANGE.

In order to continue respect for the law, a law should be based on reality and truth, not misguided perceptions and belief.  It is time to amend Wisconsin law to remove marijuana from Schedule 1, either into Schedule 2 or complete descheduling (remove from all Wisconsin Controlled Substances Act schedules) and regulate it as a way of generating money for Wisconsin.
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Most OWIs in Wisconsin have a BAC in excess of .10

3/23/2015

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During 2012, 33,579 people were arrested for Operating While Intoxicated (OWI) in Wisconsin, including 385 persons who were under 18.

Of the 4,978 drinking drivers involved in crashes in 2012, 455 (10%) were under age 21 and 4,510 were age 21 or older.

Of 26,632 drivers convicted of OWI in Wisconsin in 2012, 2,154 (8%) were under age 21 at the time of violation and 24,478 (92%) were age 21 or older.

Of the 28,728 OWI citations adjudicated in Wisconsin during 2012, 93% of the drivers were found guilty. This total included 3,886 cases where the driver refused the alcohol test. 88% of the people who refused the alcohol test were found guilty of OWI.

The median alcohol concentration (AC) test result for 2012 OWI citations was 0.17%.

Since 2002, the number of drinking drivers in crashes has declined 44% (from 8.909). In 2002, 1,325 (15%) of the 8.909 drinking drivers in crashes were under age 21. (The minimum drinking age in Wisconsin was raised from 18 to 19 in July, 1984, and from 19 to 21 in September, 1986.)

A snapshot of the Wisconsin Department of Transportation Division of Motor Vehicles Driver Record File as of December 31, 2012 showed that:

413,754 drivers had one OWI conviction
119,223 drivers had two OWI convictions
46,539 drivers had three OWI convictions
18,991 drivers had four OWI convictions
8,088 drivers had five OWI convictions
3,443 drivers had six OWI convictions
1,340 drivers had seven OWI convictions
502 drivers had eight OWI convictions
210 drivers had nine OWI convictions
87 drivers had 10 OWI convictions
42 drivers had 11 OWI convictions
16 drivers had 12 OWI convictions
6 drivers had 13 OWI convictions
3 drivers had 14 OWI convictions
3 drivers had 15 OWI convictions
2 drivers had 16 OWI convictions
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    These are reflections I have had about our criminal justice system.  Some of it may make sense, some of it might not.

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